BrisbaneRhino wrote:That report is flawed in several ways. It excludes the high grade uranium in Australia currently under export moratorium (all of Queensland). Even then it doesn't deny a potential short-term CO2 benefit. That's all I'm arguing for anyway - I in no way see nuclear as a long-term solution.
Given that he is attempting to crystallise precise conclusions from what is an enormously complex moral, political, social and scientific question I expect there are one or two flaws in his paper. Whether they bear any relation to the ones you raise I have no idea. What I do know is he is an accredited IPCC reviewer with a list of qualifications down to his shoelaces. Of course, arguments from authority can sometimes be fallacious but given that much of our current problem with global warming can be directly attributed to not trusting the experts until such time as your credentials match or exceed his I'm siding with him.
You talk about honesty being the key to finding a solution to the issue of Global Warming (provided we haven't already passed the point of no return). I agree entirely. Unfortunately, the words "nuclear energy" and "honesty" have, for the past fifty years, been kept so far apart you'd need a rocket ship to visit both in one day. Until such time when the public is granted full disclosure of the true costs in terms of money, the environment (current and future), health etc. we should treat it in precisely the same way we treat its lethal contaminants.